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Ça y est, j'ai commencé à réunir des vêtements pour Jo... mais ça m'angoisse ! Tout est déjà si genré pour les nourrissons. Et j'ai l'impression que plus mon enfant grandira, plus ce sera compliqué de trouver des vêtements « non-genrés ». Est-ce que les vêtements pour enfants ont toujours été aussi genrés ? À quoi tient leur différence ? Est-ce que je dois m'interdire certains vêtements ? Ou au contraire est-ce que je pioche dans tout ? Et si mon enfant à des goûts qui sortent des normes, comment éviter les moqueries ? Intervenant.e.s : Jo B. Paoletti, historienne du vêtement Renée Greusard, journaliste et autrice Gabrielle Richard, sociologue et autrice Bienvenu·e Bébé : journal de bord d'une éducation non-genrée est la quatrième série du podcast "Le Journal " produit par Paradiso Media. Le Journal raconte les histoires intimes de celles et ceux qui tentent de se construire hors des cadres établis. Si vous aimez ce podcast, abonnez-vous et laissez nous un maximum d'⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐! Et pour le partager, c'est simple : https://lnk.to/BandeAnnonceBienvenueBebe Retrouvez tous nos podcasts ici et nos actualités sur Instagram | Twitter | Linkedin Crédits : Écrit et raconté par : Aline Laurent-Mayard Productrice : Suzanne Colin Producteurs délégués : Lorenzo Benedetti, Louis Daboussy, Benoit Dunaigre Réalisateur, Monteur son, sound designer et mixeur : Théo Albaric Avec la voix d'Anne-Cécile Kirry Directeur.ice de production : Oriane Bettoni Chargée de production : Lucine Dorso Responsable marketing : Carla Bertone Assistante marketing : Cyrile Pocreau Assistante chargée de développement : Marie-Soizic Fraboulet Stagiaire édito : Joséphine Caro Attachée de presse : Gaëlle Job Juridique : Ludye Nysol et Alix du Plessis d'Argentré Musique Originale : D.L.i.d Graphiste : SuperFeat Photographe : Salomé Oyallon Archives : INA "Les femmes et le pantalon", JT 20H, 11.05.1973 "Paris en pantalon", Dim Dam Dom, 18.10.1968 Ressources : Renée Greusard, Choisir d'être mère : Tout ce qu'on ne vous a pas dit sur la parentalité, JC Lattès, 2022 Spinelli, M. et Hancewicz, A., Eduquer sans préjugés : Pour une éducation non-sexiste des filles et des garçons, JC Lattès, 2021 Von Berit Kruse, Natalie Sablowski, Marie-Louise Timcke et Barbara Vorsamer, « Hotpants für Mädchen, Shorts für Jungs », Süddeutsche Zeitung, 22 juillet 2022 Jo Paoletti, Pink and Blue: Telling the Boys from the Girls in America, Indiana University Press, 2012 Gabrielle Richard, Faire famille autrement,La Collection Sur la table, Binge audio Editions Henley, John, « The Power of Pink », The Guardian, 12 décembre 2009 Abbey, Camille, « Rose pour les filles et bleu pour les garçons... et si on arrêtait ? », France Inter, 6 janvier 2023 Susan Faludi, Backlash : la guerre froide contre les femmes (Traduit de l'américain par Lise-Éliane Pommier, Évelyne Châtelain et Thérèse Réveillé), Editions Des Femmes Antoinette Fouque, 1991
Through the 1800s, babies in the U.S. were dressed in gender neutral clothing — you couldn’t tell the girls from the boys based on their outfits. So why did parents start color-coding their kids in pink and blue? Plus, ELT’s long quest to get a sports team to have a flamingo as their mascot is finally over… or is it? Guests: textiles and clothing historian Jo Paoletti; cultural historian of medicine, gender, and the body Hanne Blank; and Kuba Krzyzostaniak, Director of Fan Engagement for Forward Madison FC. Thanks to caller Elle Ve and Paige — and to scholars Elizabeth Sweet, Katherine Parkin, and Valerie Steele.
It’s something we rarely think about but why do we dress girls in pink and boys in blue? Is it ok for boys to play with unicorns or for girls to like dinosaurs? To uncover the answers, dress historian Jo Paoletti looked at advertising, catalogs, dolls, baby books, mommy blogs and discussion forums, and other popular media to examine the surprising shifts in attitudes toward color as a mark of gender in American children's clothing. She chronicles the decline of the white dress for both boys and girls, the introduction of rompers in the early 20th century, the gendering of pink and blue, the resurgence of unisex fashions, and the origins of today's highly gender-specific baby and toddler clothing. Find Jo on her website at http://www.jbpaoletti.com/ Check out Jo’s blog, Gender Mystique, at https://www.pinkisforboys.org/ Grab her book, Pink and Blue: Telling the Boys from the Girls in America on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2Jq3EmF And her book, Sex and Unisex: Fashion, Feminism, and the Sexual Revolution on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2TnaiKi Connect with Curiosityness... Instagram:@curiositynesspodcast Website: https://www.curiosityness.com/ Facebook: @curiosityness Twitter: @curiositynesstv Claim your FREE Curiosityness sticker at https://www.curiosityness.com/freesticker/ Find me, the host of Curiosityness on Instagram: @travderose Or send me an email to travis@curiosityness.com
This week's episode is in the form of a question - 'Why Do Girls Wear Pink and Boys Wear Blue?' Well, Matt has a bloody crack at answering this... he goes back to the 1800s to a time before the pink and blue dichotomy, all the way up to modern day, today! US President FDR gets a mention and historian and author Jo Paoletti's research is referenced a lot. It's an interesting time!Support the show and get rewards like bonus episodes:www.patreon.com/DoGoOnPodSubmit a topic idea directly to the hat: http://bit.ly/DoGoOnHat Twitter: @DoGoOnPodInstagram: @DoGoOnPodFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/DoGoOnPod/Email us: dogoonpod@gmail.comReferences and further reading:http://www.thelist.com/32342/real-reasons-behind-blue-boys-pink-girls/https://www.theatlantic.com/sexes/archive/2013/08/pink-wasnt-always-girly/278535/http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20141117-the-pink-vs-blue-gender-mythhttp://content.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1654371,00.htmlhttps://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/when-did-girls-start-wearing-pink-1370097/http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/neuroskeptic/2017/07/02/boys-wear-pink-revisited/#.WlTNtVRdJE4https://www.researchgate.net/publication/229437155_The_Twentieth_Century_Reversal_of_Pink-Blue_Gender_Coding_A_Scientific_Urban_Legendhttps://www.theguardian.com/science/2007/aug/25/genderissueshttp://www.badscience.net/2007/08/pink-pink-pink-pink-pink-moan/https://www.livescience.com/22037-pink-girls-blue-boys.htmlhttp://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2014/10/pink-used-common-color-boys-blue-girls/https://people.howstuffworks.com/gender-color.htm See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
You liked the last minisode so we decided to give you another! In this episode, Dana, Jasmine, and Joy discuss their interview with Jo Paoletti. Paoletti is currently a material culture and gender scholar and a member of the Costume Society of America. In 2017 she will retire from the University of Maryland after 41 years as a teacher, scholar, and administrator. In the interview Dana and Joy ask questions related to gender, material culture, and the history of the Costume Society of America and her role in the society's electrifying Scholar's Roundtable. Her website: www.pinkisforboys.org her most recent publication: www.amazon.com/Sex-Unisex-Fashion-Feminism-Revolution/dp/0253015960 Her Twitter: jbpaoletti Visit the blog for images, episode bibliography and more fashion at www.unravelpodcast.tumblr.com. Instagram: @unravelpodcast Twitter: @unravelpodcast Facebook: www.facebook.com/unravelpodcast/
Our first episode! We even broke an hour, wow. Welcome to Game is a 4 Letter Word, and our first episode: PINK - It’s a Lifestyle, show notes. And a quick word if you happened to blunder onto this post somehow: I had an idea around Christmas to do a podcast, a video podcast at that time actually. While the video component has shrank, the general premise hasn’t changed all that much, which is to bring the great video game stories to people that like great stories, even if they don’t like video games, along with the beauty of design in games as well. Think of it as adding sugar (stories) to the medicine (the tech/design stuff.) Each week we take a 4 letter word as inspiration for the episode. (I know style guides would have me write 4 as four, but we’re talking about building a brand here, people.) OK! Enough explaining. The Pink Links and the LikeLike: Jo Paoletti’s work can be found at http://www.pinkisforboys.org/ where you can see an uncensored cover to her new book Sex and Unisex. Pink Gorilla’s retro charm and games can be visited virtually at http://www.pinkgorillagames.com/ and they are now rocking 3 locations in the Seattle area! If you want to get into the real nitty gritty of the Donkey Kong case you have to read David Sheff’s Game Over, a ridiculously detailed history of Nintendo’s most glorious decade: The 80’s. Still no sign of the S.S. Donkey Kong, but if we ever get a photo, we’ll post it. I go to Connecticut sometimes, maybe I can sneak a peek. You can do it for Ducky and get Pretty in Pink at the same time other at Legacy Games http://www.legacygames.com/download-games/21/PC/Pretty+in+Pink and there’s even free trail. Check out Kevin Smokler’s website at, where else, http://www.kevinsmokler.com/ Brad Smith’s Moon8 is here http://rainwarrior.ca/music/moon8.html with links to listen and more. Here’s the passage about Quinty/Mendal’s Palace from the Famicom book. Did they do a fair English translation? (John Water’s mustache now has two twitter accounts: https://twitter.com/johnwaterstache and https://twitter.com/jwatersmustache) Visit the the www.Femicom.org Museum today, and don’t forget to listen to Rachel Weil’s podcast - oh! It’s seem to have gone AWOL for now, but I’m sure it will resurface, and remnants are on Soundcloud https://soundcloud.com/femicom/ And now you - yes, you - can play Theresa Duncan’s Chop Suey and more thanks to Rhizome and some amazing cloud computing. Discover the magic at http://rhizome.org/editorial/2015/apr/17/theresa-duncan-cd-roms-are-now-playable-online/ In the Pink of Health with Show Notes Pink was never going to be the first episode. I literally have a list of of nearly 200 episode ideas, some with 4LW (typing out 4 letter words gets old,) some without. Pink was not there. Then my friend Matt (THANK YOU MATT!), who had expressed interest in helping out with the show, said he was going to Seattle and wanted to talk to the Pink Gorilla folks. This was actual action, not the meticulous planning and backsliding I was doing. Pink was formed, and I cast a net. The word of the show is haberdashery. As I mentioned in the episode, I didn’t want this to be a girl game episode, and the Jo Paoletti interview was actually the first piece, meant to anchor the idea and explore gender binaries. As time went on, as you can see, I rethought the “no girl games” issue. You see, it wasn’t that I didn’t want to look at it, I just didn’t want to go with the obvious choice. Challenge expectations. But with the Pretty in Pink game, I decided it really had to come back, full circle, and be discussed. I decided not to re-record my lines at the end of the Paoletti piece, and instead evolve the thesis as the episode went on, ending with the fabulous Rachel Weil. The John Kirby piece, with him becoming the possible namesake for the pink puffball might seem like a little bit of faded trivia, but I do find it fascinating that Kirby (the puffball) was literally whitewashed for his US premiere, with the character being white on the box art, and it being a Game Boy game, he was just tints of green and yellow on the tiny screen. Today, he stands majestic and pink. And yes, Mario is Jump Man in Donkey Kong, but let’s compress history, shall we? Pink Floyd is just a word link, but I still find it amazing. I tried to synch the Moon8 version with original via YouTubeDoubler, but, the timing is a bit off… Brad did this project years and years ago, and it was covered in the press, even NPR got in on it, but part of G4LW, and I decided this early on, isn’t about being first, but being different, and at least try to bring the human story out a bit more. (I realized retreading is not the devil, when my tote-bag world exploded, like when an episode of Radio Lab was a retelling of New York Times Sunday Magazine article I had read about Disney movies and autism. Likewise, when This American Life had a new David Sedaris piece, I bristled with excitement, but what’s this, I had read this essay myself in the New Yorker just a few months ago.) As for the Pretty in Pink film ending… I knew there was a reason I liked Some Kind of Wonderful better. I haven’t seen it since I was 11, but it may of had to do with Mary Stuart Masterson. Wearing boxer shorts with short hair. As for the John Waters/Pokemon thing, well, my pal Patrick Davison I think said it best when he listened to the piece, we had a conversation to deliver a bit of trivia. He liked it. Did you? Here’s the English description of Quinty from the Famicom book: Pink Slip We never did do a story on pink slips… maybe in Pink 2.0 Well, this went on for a bit longer than I expected. Thanks for reading, and if you haven't yet, please listen (and subscribe…. and rate and review, etc.) As always, you can follow me at @OtherWhiteTofu and Matt at @Sneakdoorbeta, and even follow the show @G4LWShow. Yeah, so we have a Patreon set up, but at this point, I’d rather get feedback than financial support. Some burning questions follow: What did you like? What didn’t you? Are you into games? Was something unclear? Who has more vocal fry, Ryan or Matt? Mail us at mail@g4lw.net or send tweets, or leave a comment below, if I get it set up in time. And if there’s a few random sound effects you heard in the episode that you are wondering about, check out the RSS and listen to episode zero, where I discuss some of the show’s leitmotif and for more background of how this show came together in the first place. Next week we look at just WHAT a video game is. Again, the general idea is that the odd numbered episodes are going to be bigger, even smaller. We are doing this so we don’t die.